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Mere Brother Ki Dulhan Movie A Depict Glimpse Of Wonderland Taj And Heart City Delhi
13 Sep 2011 Author: Go Heritage India JourneysIn: Golden Triangle Tour
“Mere Brother Ki Dulhan ” is all about the search a Dulhan for his brother. This movie is based on Ali Zaffar ,Emran Khan and Katrina Kaif. Delhi and Agra is the two majestic cities which you can see in this fun loving movie.
A song “Dhunki” is picturised on the great Agra Fort. The great monument India gate is a part of this movie. The shopaholic persons enjoy the shopping moments in this movie. So you can enjoy the funky and Bindaas look of Katrina Kaif in this movie. A song which is in Agra fort is too great and movie lovers also see the wonder Taj Mahal in this great movie. All over this movie is totally family entertaining movie.

Laxmikant
Delhi Belly – 20 must do in the capital
21 Jun 2011 Author: Go Heritage India JourneysIn: Golden Triangle Tour
After the recent Common Wealth Games circus left town, there should never be a better time to visit Delhi, with renovations of the capital’s old structures and an immense expenditure on infrastructure making Delhi gleam, at least in parts. Here are 20 great things to do in India’s frenzied capital.

1. Try-the-Dilli-ki-chaat- Delhi’s tangy local chaat, such as chaat papdi or golgappas in Old Delhi.
2. Visit the massive sandstone carcass of the Red Fort, and imagine the last days of the Mughal empire and the British era.
3. Humayun’s Tomb is a fusion of Persian style with local craftsmanship and is surrounded by the fiercely symmetrical Mughal gardens: take a stroll here at dusk.
4. Hear qawwalis (devotional music) sung at dargah of Nizamuddin Auliya; religious songs reverberating at about sunset at one of Islam’s holiest tombs.
5. An evening walk through the doors of the Imperial Hotel is like a voyage back into the days of the British raj, with polished hallways hung with chandeliers and works of art. Drink a G&T in its 1911 bar.
6. Lose yourself to shopping, in the temples to Indian Handicrafts that are Delhi’s government emporiums on Janpath, close to the Connaught Place.
7. Get lost and bewildered in the narrow bazaars of Old Delhi, and feel like you’ve wandered somewhere medieval.

8. Take a ride on the air conditioned Delhi Metro; so cheap, so clean, so democratic, unlike the other world upstairs.
9. Get a suit stitched in Khan market- take one to copy and get made-to-measure at a fraction of the cost of Savile Row.
10. Visit the erstwhile home of Indira Gandhi, Indira Gandhi Smriti, where she was shot dead by one of her bodyguards in 1984, and discover the most powerful dynasty.
11. Wander around Lodhi Gardens on a Sunday afternoon, the perfect place for local watching.
12. Discover the district of Hauz Khas, with its crumpling Mughal tombs and charming art, antique and fashion boutiques.
13. Chow down on scrumptious masala dosas at the Janpath branch of Saravana Bhavan, and finish your meal with a pleasurably gritty Madras coffee.

14. Use the map from William Dalrymple’s City of Djinns for various ways to explore the city.
15. Eat a lovely Gujarati thali at pristine Rajdhani, just opposite Rivoli cinema, just off Connaught Place street.
16. Shop middle-class Delhiite-style at laid-back Khan Market, browsing its bookshops and hanging out for a chat at Café Turtle, fuelled by coffee and gooey muffins.
17. Take a trip out to serene Qutub Minar, with its soaring minaret resembling an ornate factory chimney.

18. Wind up at the Jama Masjid, climb the mosque’s minaret, then enjoy a classic non-veg meal at nearby culinary delights Karim’s or Al-Jawahar, famed for their roasted meat kebabs.
19. Get flabbergasted by the wealth of magnificent Indian art exhibited at National Museum.
20. Visit Gandhi’s simple tomb in its serene gardens, and drink in the atmosphere – nowhere else in Delhi is as peaceful as this place.
Nisha Khan
Nonstop India: 5 travelers tips for beginners
17 Jun 2011 Author: Go Heritage India JourneysIn: Golden Triangle Tour
Chaotic, bamboozling, intoxicating, crazy, overwhelming, whacky, squalid, daunting. India is all this and more. How can you prepare yourself? Well start with these great tips for taking the ultimate travel plunge; going to India for the first time.


1. Choose your route wisely
Think about your interests first, what you like doing and plan your itinerary accordingly.
Among all the India Tour the most popular one is all time the classical route to the Golden Triangle Travel.
Starts in Delhi (Old Delhi, Jama Masjid, India Gate) before hitting Agra (Taj Mahal, Agra Fort) then Jaipur (Pink city, Palace of winds). Head back to Delhi’s wonderful bazaars for a final shopping spree before you fly home.
And if you have more specific interests
Shopping – Delhi
Beaches/ chilling – Goa
Trekking – Himachal Pradesh
Yoga – Rishikesh
Food- everywhere
Tigers – Madhya Pradesh
Thrill-seekers – Manali
Religious fervor – Varanasi
Backwaters – Kerala
2. Slow down
Too many travelers try to cram too much into a visit to India. Don’t be one of them. See the places slowly are so much more rewarding than seeing oodles of places in a flash. You’ll be less stressed, gain a deeper understanding of where you are and will enough time to interact with the people you meet.
3. Avoid the crowds
One billion people can sometime get too much for some travelers. But India also has some quite retreats. If you need to escape the crowds of the sprawling cities, consider heading south to the backwaters of Kerala, Tibetan-influenced mountainous regions like Ladakh, or prepare yourself to visit India’s many hill stations.
4. Stay healthy
Avoid tap water, and the food that has been washed in it. No ice, no salads, no fruits you peeled haven’t yourself.
Many travelers go veggie and that’s a great idea as many Indians are vegetarian, so there’s a fabulous choice of vegetarian food. If you do eat meat, make sure that it’s properly cooked. If in doubt, you can always head to the hotels.
Toilets are notoriously bad in India. Don’t forget to carry paper soap.
5. Keep cool
One reason why is India popular is for its touts and scams and generally bloody hectic. There are various ways you can reduce the chances of being overcharged or just plain cheated, but there’s no way you can ignore them. So the single most important factor for the first timer is to be calm and relaxed no matter what. Take a deep breath and move on, is a key to enjoying the country.
Love it or hate, but you simply cannot ignore it- this is India for you.
Nisha Khan
World’s bizarre buildings-masterpieces or architectural blunder?
2 Jun 2011 Author: Go Heritage India JourneysIn: Golden Triangle Tour
Sometime architecture can be so uncanny that a building can make you feel like you are watching a science fiction movie. It’s apparent that many architects have such an unusual imagination but is it always possible to combine their dream with the engineering reality?
Let’s take a look at some VERITABLY strange buildings……
*The Crooked House (Sopot, Poland)
The construction of the building started off in January 2003 and was completed by December 2003. The architecture of the building is based on Jan Marcin Szancer (famous Polish artist and child books illustrator) and Per Dahlberg (Swedish painter living in Sopot) pictures and paintings.

* The Basket Building (Ohio, United States)
The Longaberger Basket Company building in Newark, Ohio is one of the freakiest offices building in the world. The 180,000-square-foot building, a repro of the company’s famous market basket, was build at a whooping cost of $30 million at a time period of two years to get accomplished.

* Wonderworks (Pigeon Forge, TN, United States)
An upside down amusement park combining education and entertainment. When you will enter the building, so in order to participate in the fun, you must be inverted.

* Bahá’í House of Worship aka Lotus Temple (Delhi, India)
The Bahá’í House of Worship in New Delhi, India is popularly known as Lotus Temple due to its flowerlike shape. Due to its unique architecture, the temple has won several architectural awards and has been featured in hundreds of magazines and newspapers.

* Cube Houses (Rotterdam, Netherlands)
Kubuswoningen, a.k.a cube houses, are a set of innovative houses built in Rotterdam and Helmond in The Netherlands, commissioned by renowned architect Piet Blom in 1984 and based on the conception of “living as an urban roof.

* Seattle Public Library (Washington, USA)
It has a notable works of architecture. It was designed by Rem Koolhaas and Joshua Prince-Ramus of OMA. In 2007, the building was voted 108 on the American Institute of Architects’ (AIA) list of Americans’ 150 favorite structures in the U.S. The building received a 2005 national AIA Honor Award for its strange Architecture.

* Hearst Tower (New York City, United States)
The tower- standing 182 meters (597 ft) with 80,000 square metres (860,000 sq ft) in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, New York is a six storey headquarter building designed by the architect Norman Foster at a whopping cost of at a cost of $2 million. Hearst Tower was the first skyscraper to break ground in New York City after September 11, 2001terror attack. It also bagged Emporis Skyscraper Award citing it as the world’s best skyscraper completed that year.

*Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències (Valencia, Spain)
The City of Arts and Science i.e. Ciutat de les Arts i les Ciències- is an entertainment based cultural and architectural complex based in the city of Valencia, Spain. Designed by Santiago Calatrava and Félix Candela, this is one of the major hot spot tourist’s destination in the city of Valencia.

Nisha Khan
Riches from the past; Jaipur
24 May 2011 Author: Go Heritage India JourneysIn: Golden Triangle Tour
Jaipur city is a freaking dream-a fantasy in rose pastel, an extravaganza in sandstone, a romantic ornament, an aesthetic experience. There is no place in the world, quiet like it, even though Kipling long ago called it “a big bewildering practical joke” …
Like Kyoto, Paris or even Washington D.C., it is a city itself which is groovier than its individual buildings. But even more beautiful than the city are its graceful, elegant people.
Jaipur which literally means “City of Victory” is on the boom and is flourishing in all directions. Jaipur city has made a giant stride; it has been the site of many international conferences and average 20,000 tourists from abroad each year.
A complete new city has sprung up besides the old. But it is still the Old city which ahs the real color. The town, founded in 1728 by a mathematically minded Maharaja, Sawai Jai Singh II, looks like a model of intense planning. Its avenue and boulevards, cutting each other at right angles, are broader. And it is Pink. Jai Singh grandson issued a flat that all the construction in the capital should be oleander Pink; so the entire large metropolis has street after street of painted pastel pink facades flanked by palaces of Oriental fantasy.
Each house is fretted with balconies and lattice windows, and many are crowned by domes, towers and turrets trimmed in gold, reflecting the sum and creating a fairyland setting for this ancient home of the Rajput Princes.
You can choose the Golden triangle tours India and let the travelers explore the architectural grandeur, natural vistas, and the profound mysteries locked inside the gates of this City.
Nisha Khan
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